Jump to content

Ellerspring

Ellerspring
View over Winterbach to the Ellerspring
with its transmission tower
Highest point
Elevation657.5 m above sea level (NHN) (2,157 ft) [1]
Prominence182 m ↓ Rheinböllen[2]
Isolation30.2 km
Listing– highest point in the Soonwald
Ellerspring Transmission Tower
Coordinates49°54′47″N 7°36′43″E / 49.913194°N 7.611861°E / 49.913194; 7.611861
Geography
Parent rangeSoonwald, Hunsrück
Geology
Rock typequartzite

The Ellerspring, at 657.5 m above sea level (NHN),[1] is the highest point of the Soonwald, a part of the Hunsrück mountains in the German Central Uplands. It is situated near Winterbach in the county of Bad Kreuznach in the state of Rhineland-Palatinate

Geography

Location

The Ellerspring lies in the northwest of the county of Bad Kreuznach roughly in the centre of the Soonwald-Nahe Nature Park. It rises within the parish of Winterbach, whose village church stands some 4.6 km south-southeast of the summit. About 1 km to the northwest of the summit in the valley of the Gräfenbach, which initially flows southwest, and that of the Lametbach, which begins by heading northeast, is the boundary with the county of Rhein-Hunsrück-Kreis, in which are located the villages of Argenthal (to the north), Riesweiler and Tiefenbach (to the northwest) and Sargenroth and Mengerschied (to the west). Not far from the mountain, in the county of Bad Kreuznach, lie the villages of Spabrücken and Münchwald (to the east), Gebroth (to the southeast) and Winterbach and Ippenschied (to the south-southeast). About 2 km (as the crow flies) south-southwest of the summit at a height of about 529 m rises the Nahe tributary of Ellerbach, after which the mountain is named. Roughly northeast of the summit is the Ödesborner Höhe (641.1 m) and, beyond that, the Hölzenkopf (604.8 m). Forming a spur to the south-southeastern is the Odstein (511.0 m) and, to the east, the Steineberg (563.9 m).

Natural regions

The Ellerspring belongs to the natural regional major unit group of Hunsrück (No. 24), in the major unit of Soonwald (240) and the sub-unit of Großer Soon (240.1) to the eponymous natural region of Großer Soon (240.11).

References

See what we do next...

OR

By submitting your email or phone number, you're giving mschf permission to send you email and/or recurring marketing texts. Data rates may apply. Text stop to cancel, help for help.

Success: You're subscribed now !